Business Day

Angola ends oil tax exemption

- COLIN MCCLELLAND

ANGOLA, Africa’s largest oil producer after Nigeria, is imposing a consumptio­n tax on petroleum companies that will raise some costs by as much as 10%, says the government.

ANGOLA, Africa’s largest oil producer after Nigeria, is imposing a consumptio­n tax on petroleum companies that will raise some costs by as much as 10%, according to government documents.

The law, which comes into effect with its publicatio­n, requires companies to follow a tax schedule that adds 5% to most services and supplies and double that for equipment rentals, a presidenti­al decree showed.

Angola set up a special tax reform branch in 2010 to work with government ministries on increasing revenue and closing loopholes in a bid to simplify taxation. The country, a member of the Organisati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, pumped about 1.74-million barrels a day last month from offshore fields, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

“Oil companies have benefited from tax exemptions even as government reforms have expanded the net of taxable services,” Emily Anderson, a researcher at the London School of Economics, said in an e-mailed response. “Closing loopholes in the fiscal system will bring greater tax justice and taxpayer confidence across all industries while making good economic sense.”

Companies spend about $20bn a year in petroleum exploratio­n and production in Angola, according to Londonbase­d GlobalData and Oil- field Support Angola Lda based in the capital, Luanda. Tapping fields under one kilometre of ocean and three kilometres below the seabed tests limits of current technology. Mercer ranks Luanda as the world’s most expensive city for expatriate­s with an oil-driven economy that has inflated prices. Angola is continuing to recover from a 27year civil war that ended in 2002.

BP, ConocoPhil­lips and Statoil are among oil explorers investing at least $3bn in wells off Angola next year, David Thomson, an analyst with Wood Mackenzie in Edinburgh, said in August.

The companies will drill 20 wells at a cost of $150m each, he said.

The government’s tax reform branch plans to simplify and modernise codes while boosting revenue, Gilberto Luther, director of the reform project, said in an interview in April.

By 2017 or soon after, a value-added tax on finished products and services will replace the consumptio­n tax that is charged on each stage of manufactur­ing, Mr Luther said. The new levy will cut the “cascading effect” of the current tax, which increases inflation by making prices higher than a lone tariff on the final product, he said.

Discussion­s were under way at state petroleum company Sonangol, the ministry of petroleum and among oil officials whether to reduce the industry’s tax exemptions for raw materials and trim the current 90 days that oil companies are allowed to finish a customs declaratio­n, Nicholas Neto, head of the policy and procedures department in Angola’s National Customs Service, said in an interview in May.

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